% File src/library/base/man/match.Rd
% Part of the R package, http://www.R-project.org
% Copyright 1995-2008 R Core Development Team
% Distributed under GPL 2 or later

\name{match}
\alias{match}
\alias{\%in\%}
\title{Value Matching}
\description{
  \code{match} returns a vector of the positions of (first) matches of
  its first argument in its second.

  \code{\%in\%} is a more intuitive interface as a binary operator,
  which returns a logical vector indicating if there is a match or not
  for its left operand.
}
\usage{
match(x, table, nomatch = NA_integer_, incomparables = NULL)

x \%in\% table
}
\arguments{
  \item{x}{vector or \code{NULL}: the values to be matched.}
  \item{table}{vector or \code{NULL}: the values to be matched against.}
  \item{nomatch}{the value to be returned in the case when no match is
    found.  Note that it is coerced to \code{integer}.}
  \item{incomparables}{a vector of values that cannot be matched.  Any
    value in \code{x} matching a value in this vector is assigned the
    \code{nomatch} value.  For historical reasons, \code{FALSE} is
    equivalent to \code{NULL}.}
}
\value{
  A vector of the same length as \code{x}.

  \code{match}: An integer vector giving the position in \code{table} of
  the first match if there is a match, otherwise \code{nomatch}.

  If \code{x[i]} is found to equal \code{table[j]} then the value
  returned in the \code{i}-th position of the return value is \code{j},
  for the smallest possible \code{j}.  If no match is found, the value
  is \code{nomatch}.

  \code{\%in\%}: A logical vector, indicating if a match was located for
  each element of \code{x}.
}
\details{
  \code{\%in\%} is currently defined as \cr
  \code{"\%in\%" <- function(x, table) match(x, table, nomatch = 0) > 0}

  Factors, raw vectors and lists are converted to character vectors, and
  then \code{x} and \code{table} are coerced to a common type (the later
  of the two types in R's ordering, logical < integer < numeric <
  complex < character) before matching.  If \code{incomparables} has
  positive length it is coerced to the common type.

  Matching for lists is potentially very slow and best avoided except in
  simple cases.

  Exactly what matches what is to some extent a matter of definition.
  For all types, \code{NA} matches \code{NA} and no other value.
  For real and complex values, \code{NaN} values are regarded
  as matching any other \code{NaN} value, but not matching \code{NA}.
}
\references{
  Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988)
  \emph{The New S Language}.
  Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
}
\seealso{
  \code{\link{pmatch}} and \code{\link{charmatch}} for (\emph{partial})
  string matching, \code{\link{match.arg}}, etc for function argument
  matching.
  \code{\link{findInterval}} similarly returns a vector of positions, but
  finds numbers within intervals, rather than exact matches.

  \code{\link{is.element}} for an S-compatible equivalent of \code{\%in\%}.
}
\examples{
## The intersection of two sets can be defined via match():
## Simple version:  intersect <- function(x, y) y[match(x, y, nomatch = 0)]
intersect # the R function in base, slightly more careful
intersect(1:10,7:20)

1:10 \%in\% c(1,3,5,9)
sstr <- c("c","ab","B","bba","c","@","bla","a","Ba","\%")
sstr[sstr \%in\% c(letters,LETTERS)]

"\%w/o\%" <- function(x,y) x[!x \%in\% y] #--  x without y
(1:10) \%w/o\% c(3,7,12)
}
\keyword{manip}
\keyword{logic}
